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Thousands of carpets sunbathe at Turkish resort

Thousands of carpets sunbathe at Turkish resort
An aerial view shows handwoven carpets laid out in the open fields to soften their colors under sizzling sun in Dosemealti district in Antalya on July 22, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 5 sec ago

Thousands of carpets sunbathe at Turkish resort

Thousands of carpets sunbathe at Turkish resort

Hasan Topkara washed wool knotted carpets and rugs that come from across Turkiye
The wool, colored with natural vegetable dyes, takes on pastel tones and softens between the morning dew and the heat of the day

ANTALYA: Thousands of carpets and kilim rugs spread out in the sun form a festive and kaleidoscopic patchwork on the outskirts of Antalya, a coastal tourist city in southern Turkiye.

From June to September, in harvested fields cleared of stubble, merchants bring their cargo to age in the sun, tempering the bright hues of their natural colors and ridding them of undesirable elements.

Hasan Topkara washed wool knotted carpets and rugs that come from across Turkiye. He drives them, trims their fringes and stray strands if necessary, then spreads them out in the sunlight for three months, on the bare ground.

The wool, colored with natural vegetable dyes, takes on pastel tones and softens between the morning dew and the heat of the day.

According to Topkara, in the past, up to 60,000 carpets were processed in each three month drying season in the Dosemealti district.

But today he is one of the last ones to do so, with around 15,000 carpets stored side by side on a
40-hectare (100 acre) area.

Around 50 workers watch them day and night, turning them regularly and monitoring the weather. About 100 people rush in from the surrounding villages to help fold the carpets if there is rain.

In 45 minutes, everything must be put away in a sheltered place, then brought out again once the rain has stopped.

Once they have reached the desired shade, most of the carpets are sent to Istanbul and its historic
Grand Bazaar, from where they are frequently shipped abroad.

Over the years, Topkara’s field of colors has become a tourist attraction, especially after Turkish pop singer Mabel Matiz recorded a video clip for his song ā€œSarmasikā€ there in 2018.


Belgium says will take part in Gaza aid-drop plan

Belgium says will take part in Gaza aid-drop plan
Updated 3 sec ago

Belgium says will take part in Gaza aid-drop plan

Belgium says will take part in Gaza aid-drop plan
  • A Belgian plane carrying medical supplies and food worth some 600,000 euros ($690,000) will fly ā€œsoonā€ to Jordan, and will remain on stand-by to conduct air drops in coordination with Amman
BRUSSELS: Belgium will take part in a multi-country operation coordinated by Jordan to airdrop aid to Gaza, the government announced Wednesday, as UN agencies warn the Palestinian territory is slipping into famine.
A Belgian plane carrying medical supplies and food worth some 600,000 euros ($690,000) will fly ā€œsoonā€ to Jordan, and will remain on stand-by to conduct air drops in coordination with Amman, the defense and foreign ministries said in a statement.
Belgium joins a string of Western nations including France, Spain and Britain looking to send aid into Gaza by air as fears mount of mass starvation in the territory.
ā€œThese airdrops are a first step, but they can in no way be a cover for the urgent need to facilitate access by land,ā€ Belgian foreign minister Maxime Prevot said.
ā€œI will continue to plead with the Israeli authorities to allow these deliveries to enter Gaza by road as quickly as possible.ā€
The World Food Programme, UNICEF and the Food and Agriculture Organization warned Tuesday that time was running out and that Gaza was ā€œon the brink of a full-scale famine.ā€
Israel imposed a total blockade on Gaza on March 2 after ceasefire talks broke down. In late May, it began allowing a small trickle of aid to resume, amid rising fears of a wave of starvation.
Then on Sunday, faced with mounting international criticism, Israel began a series of ā€œtactical pausesā€ while allowing aid trucks to pass through two border crossings into Gaza, and Jordanian and Emirati planes to conduct airdrops.
Deliveries have been ramped up, but the experts advising the UN said this effort would not prove enough unless aid agencies were granted ā€œimmediate, unimpededā€ humanitarian access.

Palestinians in West Bank village face new crisis as settlers cut off water

Updated 19 sec ago

Palestinians in West Bank village face new crisis as settlers cut off water

Palestinians in West Bank village face new crisis as settlers cut off water
WEST BANK: Palestinians in the village of Susiya in the Israeli-occupied West Bank thought life could not get worse as Jewish settlers were attacking them repeatedly and ripping apart their precious olive groves.
Then settlers armed with knives set upon their water sources, villagers said.
ā€œThey want us to live without water, and here they also cut the electrical wires,ā€ said Mousa Mughnem, 67, who lives with his 60-year-old wife Najah in the village near the town of Hebron.
Palestinians in the West Bank have reported growing Israeli settler violence since war erupted between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza on October 7, 2023.
Palestinian authorities who exercise limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank say the settlers are trying to force Palestinians off their lands in order to seize them.
Emboldened by some far-right Israeli government ministers who seek to annex the West Bank, settlers have assaulted Palestinian farmers, cut down trees and set fire to precious olive groves.
Jihad Al-Nawajaa, the head of the Susiya village council, said the water shortages have become unbearable. ā€œIf we do not have water here, we will not survive. They make us thirsty in order to expel us, and their aim is to expel people,ā€ he said.
Residents of Susiya accuse Israeli settlers of severing water pipes and electricity wires, chopping down their olive trees and preventing them from herding their sheep.
In response to a Reuters request for a comment on settler attacks in Susiya, the Israeli military said soldiers have been dispatched to deal with any troubles and have removed Israeli citizens involved.
ā€œAs for the most recent incident that occurred on Monday (July 28), same protocol was used, and no injuries were reported,ā€ the army said.

OLIVE TREES PART OF PALESTINIAN IDENTITY
Palestinians have cultivated olive trees for generations and regard them as an enduring symbol of their national identity.
Some villagers, like Najah Mughnem, are defiant and say they will remain attached to their land and their olives no matter what the settlers do.
ā€œEven if they burn down or cut down the trees or inflict damage, we will not leave,ā€ she said.
B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization, has reported around 54 settler attacks on the village since October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants attacked Israel from Gaza, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages.
Israel’s military response has killed more than 60,000 people in Gaza, according to the enclave’s health authorities.
ā€œWe are afraid... We spend the days and nights nervous, we hardly sleep,ā€ said Fawziyeh Al-Nawajaa, 58, a Susiya villager.
Susiya residents have faced threats of demolition for decades. Palestinians there were so attached to their lands that they once lived in caves until they were expelled in 1986 after an archaeological site was discovered.
The caves were later destroyed and they now live in tents and prefabricated buildings.
The village is spread across several rocky hillsides between a Jewish settlement to the south and a Jewish archaeological site to the north — land Israel has occupied since the 1967 Middle East war.

Australia’s first Muslim MP calls for country to recognize Palestine

Australia’s first Muslim MP calls for country to recognize Palestine
Updated 2 min 52 sec ago

Australia’s first Muslim MP calls for country to recognize Palestine

Australia’s first Muslim MP calls for country to recognize Palestine
  • Ed Husic: Govt should follow in UK’s footsteps as part of tide of ā€˜moral momentum’
  • ā€˜Hamas is built largely on grievance. That grievance gets removed with the establishment of a state of Palestine’

LONDON: Australia’s first Muslim MP and government minister has said his country should recognize a Palestinian state, following in the footsteps of the UK as part of a tide of ā€œmoral momentum.ā€

The appeal by Labor’s Ed Husic, who was elected in 2010, came as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is to hold further talks with his British counterpart Keir Starmer in the coming days.

Starmer pledged this week to recognize a Palestinian state in September if Israel fails to reach a ceasefire with Hamas, among other conditions.

If Australia does the same, it would deprive Hamas of its power in Gaza and expedite the peace process, Husic said.

ā€œHamas is built largely on grievance. That grievance gets removed with the establishment of a state of Palestine, nurtured with the cooperation and support of the international community, progressed through the development of democratic institutions,ā€ he added.

The former minister said his Labor colleagues feel increasingly aggrieved over the situation in Gaza, calling on them to urge Australian recognition of a Palestinian state.

ā€œThere is a deep feeling within the caucus, about how right it is to recognize Palestine, and I would much rather that colleagues speak for themselves,ā€ he added.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong signed an international statement calling for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

Albanese, however, declined to immediately follow Starmer’s decision despite Australia’s government previously signaling that it would move in unison with international partners on measures to address the crisis in Gaza.

ā€œWhat I’ve said is that it’s not the timeline, that’s not what we’re looking at. What we’re looking at is the circumstances where recognition will advance the objective of the creation of two states,ā€ Albanese said at Parliament House after speaking with Starmer this week.

ā€œI’ve said for a long time, my entire political life, I’ve said I support two states … That’s my objective — not making a statement, not giving a political point, but achieving peace.ā€


Marjorie Taylor Greene says Gaza experiencing ā€˜genocide’ in Republican first

Marjorie Taylor Greene says Gaza experiencing ā€˜genocide’ in Republican first
Updated 26 min 23 sec ago

Marjorie Taylor Greene says Gaza experiencing ā€˜genocide’ in Republican first

Marjorie Taylor Greene says Gaza experiencing ā€˜genocide’ in Republican first
  • Lawmaker: ā€˜The genocide, humanitarian crisis and starvation happening in Gaza’ are ā€˜horrific’
  • Her comments follow Trump saying Palestinians in enclave suffering from ā€˜real starvation’

LONDON: Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has described Israel’s war in Gaza as a ā€œgenocide,ā€ becoming the first lawmaker from her party to do so.

It came in a social media post following comments by US President Donald Trump that contradicted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claim that there is no starvation in Gaza.

Greene was responding to comments by Rep. Randy Fine, a Jew and one of Israel’s strongest supporters in the US Congress, The Independent reported.

Fine had said on X: ā€œRelease the hostages. Until then, starve away. (This is all a lie anyway. It amazes me that the media continues to regurgitate Muslim terror propaganda.)ā€

Greene responded: ā€œI can only imagine how Florida’s sixth district feels now that their representative, that they were told to vote for, openly calls for starving innocent people and children.

ā€œIt’s the most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct. 7 in Israel was horrific and all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis and starvation happening in Gaza.

ā€œBut a Jewish US representative calling for the continued starvation of innocent people and children is disgraceful.ā€

Her social media spat with Fine followed Trump’s contradiction of Netanyahu, who said on Sunday: ā€œThere is no policy of starvation in Gaza and there is no starvation in Gaza.ā€

Trump, while visiting the UK to meet Prime Minister Keir Starmer this week, said the Palestinian enclave is suffering from ā€œreal starvation.ā€

Palestinian children in Gaza ā€œlook very hungry,ā€ he added, saying the US would work with other countries to provide assistance to the enclave.


Norwegian aid chief slams Israel’s Gaza war as ā€˜destruction of a civilization’

Norwegian aid chief slams Israel’s Gaza war as ā€˜destruction of a civilization’
Updated 30 min 12 sec ago

Norwegian aid chief slams Israel’s Gaza war as ā€˜destruction of a civilization’

Norwegian aid chief slams Israel’s Gaza war as ā€˜destruction of a civilization’
  • Jan Egelund says time is running out to avoid a ā€˜bibilical famine’
  • NGO chief warns aid drops and brief corridors are not enough

LONDON: Israel’s military operation in Gaza is no longer a war against militants but has become a ā€œdestruction of a civilization,ā€ a top aid official said, warning that time is running out to prevent a ā€œbiblical famineā€ in the besieged enclave.

In an interview with CNN on Tuesday, Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said Israel’s continued bombardment and restrictions on aid access have left Gaza’s civilian population, particularly women and children, to suffer the consequences of a conflict they had no part in.

ā€œWhat I see is that, as a military conflict, it was all over a long time ago,ā€ Egeland told anchor Bianna Golodryga. ā€œThis is not targeted anti-terrorist warfare, it’s the destruction of a civilization now.ā€

The veteran humanitarian said there are no justifications for the war on Gaza, which has killed more than 60,000 people and pushed the enclave’s population of 2.2 million to the brink of famine.

ā€œHamas has a million sins on their conscience … but those dying (and) bleeding have nothing to do with Hamas. These are women and children. They had nothing to do with Oct. 7,ā€ he said, calling for an immediate ceasefire and an urgent and large-scale opening of Gaza’s border crossings to allow full access for aid groups.

Egeland’s remarks come amid growing international pressure on Israel to ease restrictions and allow humanitarian aid into Gaza, as malnutrition-related deaths continue to rise. During a Saudi-French conference on Tuesday, UN experts confirmed that large areas of the enclave are now experiencing full-scale famine.

Israel has responded with efforts to increase aid deliveries including a temporary pause in military operations, partial openings of humanitarian corridors, and aid airdrops.

Egeland, however, said such efforts are not enough ā€œto avert a biblical famine on our watch,ā€ criticizing the air drops and temporary corridors for offering little relief to a starving population.

While he welcomed the shifting stances of US President Donald Trump, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and other Western leaders who finally recognized the widespread starvation gripping the Palestinian territory, Egeland emphasized that the solution to avert the crisis ultimately rests with them.

ā€œIt is Israel and the Western powers that provide the arms to all of this that have to change this. They have the fingerprint all over this catastrophe really. We can change it. It’s still possible.ā€

Despite the mounting death toll and near-total collapse of humanitarian infrastructure, Egeland said the international community still has a chance to avert the worst — but only if it acts immediately and decisively.

ā€œIt has to be a massive ramp up. And time is running out,ā€ he warned.

On Monday, in a meeting with Starmer, Trump acknowledged that there is ā€œreal starvationā€ in Gaza. The British prime minister announced the following day that the UK will recognize a Palestinian state in September unless Israel takes significant steps to end the ā€œappalling situationā€ in Gaza and meets other conditions.

Egeland said Western leaders were finally acknowledging warnings that aid agencies had been raising for months.

ā€œThese capitals have known so, because we told them for many months, I’m glad it’s — there is a wakeup call now. It is very late,ā€ he said.

Addressing the humanitarian catastrophe, the NRC chief noted the collapse of the food and health sectors, saying that people were dying from preventable disease and lack of water and sanitation.

He said his NGO has been finding it impossible to provide the basic services of water, sanitation and shelter due to the total depletion of fuel and continued restrictions.

The organization, he noted, is ā€œstill denied access for our water and sanitation hygiene items, our food and our tents.ā€

The aid chief paid tribute to the resilience of his Palestinian colleagues in Gaza, describing them as ā€œreal heroesā€ who have endured repeated displacement, hunger, and profound personal loss while continuing their humanitarian work.

ā€œIf there is anyone I would give the Nobel Peace Prize to, I would give it to my colleagues on the ground, Palestinian, in Gaza, the single mothers who are also aid workers.

ā€œBut they’re really broken now, after all of these months of starvation, all of these months of having their homes destroyed.ā€